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Lädt ... The Displaced: Refugee Writers on Refugee Livesvon Viet Thanh Nguyen (Herausgeber)
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Melde dich bei LibraryThing an um herauszufinden, ob du dieses Buch mögen würdest. Keine aktuelle Diskussion zu diesem Buch. The Displaced is a collection of essays from noted writers, each of whom has a background as a refugee. Each of these stories illuminates a different aspect of the refugee experience. The authors have a range of origins: a Hungarian who fled from the USSR, a person left stateless at the end of the second world war, and people who have fled wars and repressive regimes in Asia, the Middle East, Europe and South America. This is a book that really makes you think. 'How much do refugees need to try to fit into their new country? What sort of welcome do they experience? Are they obliged to be grateful, or do we owe them help? And how does the experience of past waves of refugees compare with the people currently seeking asylum? There are 65 million displaced people in the world, according to the UNHCR. The plight of the displaced is one of the biggest human problems that we face. This book is a valuable contribution to our thinking on the problems that they encounter, and how we might help. It's doubtful that few people other than refugees can truly know the feeling of permanently forsaking their home country, but some idea can be gleaned from the pages of this book. The Displaced: Refugee Writers on Refugee Lives consists of essays of various writers who fled their homelands in search of a new existence. The editing is by Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist Viet Thanah Nguyen, who was born in Vietnam before the fall of South Vietnam in 1971. Each story is a unique perspective. You would expect political views from the contributors in such a compilation, and there is no disappointment in that regard, Ariel Dorfman's essay being a prime example. This novelist and playwright feels that President Donald Trump's battle to build a wall along the southern U.S. border has been lost. While mulling over that opinion, consider the fact that one of many hats worn by this Buenos Aires, Argentina native is that of human rights activist. I found the collection of interest in light of the fact that my wife has been a United States immigrant for more than 40 years. Having heard her voice the emotions of becoming a naturalized citizen, it was easy to relate to some of the stories in this book. One essay tells of an Indian man who was very emotional at his naturalization ceremony. After finishing his pledge of allegiance to the U.S. he shouted into the mic, “I'M AN AMERICAN! FINALLY I AM AN AMERICAN!” It's important to understand and empathize with our fellow humans who have migrated to a strange land. Many did so just to be in a place where they no longer must endure the kind of hardship we may find hard to fathom. While the ways they got here may sometimes be open for debate, all of the refugees have human stories to convey. Nguyen is to be praised for his effort to allow some of these people to contribute their worthwhile and thoughtful reads. This book made me think about the difference between and immigrant and a refugee. An immigrant is a person who chooses to leave his/her country.Looking back at my family tree, most of my ancestors were immigrants. For example my great great great grandmother and her youngest son came to the United States soon after the Civil War. Her husband had died recently and the factory where they worked in Carlisle, England had to be closed down. She and her younger son were both out the only jobs that they had ever down. She decided to go with her younger son and meet with her two older boys who were already in United States so that they could obtain employment. Yet one of my friend's parents were both refugees. They had no choice but to leave their countries because they were descendants for Jews and lived in Nazi controlled countries. They had to flee or die. What forces people out can also be a natural disasters or wars. There are other differences like a lack of documentation. This book is a collection of essays written by the refugees. They told told of the situations that caused them to leave,the process traveling, what experiences they had after to getting to the country, assimilating or remaining separate. The people came from Viet Nam, Mexico, Afghanistan, Bosnia, Hungary and others. Many of the stories are ones of fear and desperation, others tell of how they felt they never belonged to their new country. These stories are all recently written and reflect how they felt about being depicted by the current administration. I received advanced reading of half of the essays n the finished this finished copy of The Displaced from the Publishers as a win from FirstReads but that in no way influenced my thoughts or feelings in my review. Zeige 4 von 4 keine Rezensionen | Rezension hinzufügen
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Pulitzer Prize-winning author Viet Thanh Nguyen, himself a refugee, brings together a host of prominent refugee writers from around the world to explore and illuminate their experiences. Poignant and insightful, this collection of essays reveals moments of uncertainty, resilience int he face of trauma, and a reimagining of identity. The Displaced is a powerful look at what it means to be forced to leave home and find a place of refuge. -- Adapted from book jacket. Keine Bibliotheksbeschreibungen gefunden. |
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Google Books — Lädt ... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)305.9Social sciences Social Sciences; Sociology and anthropology Groups of people People by occupation and miscellaneous social statusesKlassifikation der Library of Congress [LCC] (USA)BewertungDurchschnitt:
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this opens with an introduction from viet thanh nguyen, and it's a seriously amazing essay. my favorite in the collection, and it makes me want to read his books, especially his recently released memoir. i also particularly was moved by porochista khakpour's essay. these two writers alone made this collection worth reading, but there are other great ones as well. overall the entire thing is really well written, with so much to think about along with the great writing.
really not the point of the essay by fatima bhutto, but wow this blew me away: "Cedars-Sinai hospital in Los Angeles is already using VR as a 'pharmacy,' Sophie Hackford, a London-based futurist, says, transporting patients to relaxing and sooting environments before traumatic surgery. With a headset and a pair of headphones, burn victims in excruciating pain are clicked into cold locations and just the imagination, the virtual imagery of snow and ice, has been found to release them from the physical confines of their pain 60 percent more efficiently than morphine."
from the essay by reyna grande: "Unfortunately for us immigrants, the trauma doesn't end with a successful border crossing. I believe that for the rest of your life, you carry that border inside of you. It becomes a part of your psyche, your being, your identity." and "It is the central irony of my life that my parents emigrated to try to save our family, but by doing so, they destroyed it."
some excerpts from porochista khakpour's essay: "There is a big sign: SALE. There is a whole section of Cabbage Patch Kids on sale, it turns out, and your mother is telling you they are in your budget, but she doesn't think they are the right ones for you. You are elated, then confused--why would she think that? And then you look at them, one by one, row after row. What do they have in common? They are black, all of them, the sale ones. You think about it. They could be your adopted child, why not. You are still too young to know how babies are made, so you don't think much deeper. You reach out to a pigtailed black one in a yellow track suit and you tell your mother that this is your daughter. Her name turns out to be Clover Stephanie and you still have her somewhere in storage. Her cheek is a bit scraped and looks white underneath. It bothers you, that fact. It bothers you also that you only have Clover because she was on sale, because she was black, but that was your first lesson about America, so maybe it was worth it." and
"You wonder if your Americanness is forever and if you will die an American. You realize it might be just as hard to shake being an American as it was to become one in the first place. You realize with joy you will die an American; you realize with agony you will die an American. You realize with horror and confusion and fear and disbelief that you will die an American. Somehow it is harder to imagine than dying." and
"You wonder who has died because of your will to become an American, and you wonder also if they look like you."
from novuyo rosa tsdhuma's essay: "The suffering of non-white bodies is so naturalized, so overwhelming, and so ordinary that it ceases to be exceptional." ( )